The handful of Newsweek employees who are being offered jobs by new owner IBT Media may be disheartened when they hear about the digital company’s 1950s-era dress code.

No mini skirts, denim jeans or bare midriffs are allowed — and when it comes to hair, only a “natural color” will do.

IBT, a digital firm that publishes the International Business Times, also has a strict policy on reimbursements that looks like it might have been hatched back in the go-go ’80s — setting low limits on how much can be spent on meals.

A lot of the “entertaining” may have to be done at Applebee’s or McDonald’s.

In New York, the reimbursement rate is set at $15 per individual meal and a whopping $85 when entertaining a guest — not exactly the Four Seasons day rate. In Phoenix, the personal reimbursement is $9, but it’s $50 if a guest tags along, according to the employee handbook.

According to the IBT employee handbook, obtained by Media Ink:

— Open toe sandals are not permitted.

— Body piercing (other than earrings) should not be visible.

— Inappropriately dressed employees will be asked to return home to change into suitable clothing.